Photodetachment and Test-Particle Simulation Constraints on Negative Ions in Solar System Plasmas [CL]

http://arxiv.org/abs/2106.08764


Negative ions have been detected in abundance in recent years by spacecraft across the solar system. These detections were, however, made by instruments not designed for this purpose and, as such, significant uncertainties remain regarding the prevalence of these unexpected plasma components. In this article, the phenomenon of photodetachment is examined and experimentally and theoretically derived cross-sections are used to calculate photodetachment rates for a range of atomic and molecular negative ions subjected to the solar photon spectrum. These rates are applied to negative ions outflowing from Europa, Enceladus, Titan, Dione and Rhea and their trajectories are traced to constrain source production rates and the extent to which negative ions are able to pervade the surrounding space environments. Predictions are also made for further negative ion populations in the outer solar system with Triton used as an illustrative example. This study demonstrates how, at increased heliocentric distances, negative ions can form stable ambient plasma populations and can be exploited by future missions to the outer solar system.

Read this paper on arXiv…

R. Desai, Z. Zhang, X. Wu, et. al.
Thu, 17 Jun 21
63/74

Comments: Planetary Science Journal Article, accepted 05 April 2021. Preprint contains 21 pages, 8 figures, 1 table